The world is just a
Rubber band.
Rubber bands. A ball of
rubber bands.
In ripping one off, its elastic
keeping it together, the rest are
collectively unfettered by the
absence of its kin.
In ripping off two, it’s but coincidence
to do without extra support.
The others hold happy rapport.
In ripping off all, well, there is
no more ball.
There is no more world which
Atlas can whirl upon his
broad shoulder strung tight with
strain.
The bands have no purpose.
Their life, when all burst, is
but salt on a poor woman’s
palm.
So together they prefer; even if
one doesn’t concur, by booting it
out, the others don’t doubt that
they will ever fall down again.
Power’s in numbers, I guess,
all but numbers. But repetitions of
petitions, doubles of
troubles, doppelgängers of
strangers.
Those numbers are all
just the same.
Who really wins
the game?
Is it those that
stay in, fearful to
begin? To depart, to
break hearts, to embark all
alone?
Or is it those that snap off,
too annoyed to gawk at the
same and the tame and the
lame game that remains?
Who find purpose past cloning,
past blending in and droning
“Power’s in numbers,” these numbers
all mumblers, these mumblers
all mumbling the same.
All bumbling the same,
towards boring-filled days of thinking together and
drinking together and
being together until they are all
one another; endlessly,
relentlessly the same.
The world is a rubber band,
many rubber bands, bound
tightly, bound “rightly” through
identical sighting of a
life lived a million times.
Brilliantly written!
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Thank You!
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